Cardiorenal syndrome encompasses a spectrum of disorders involving both the heart and kidneys in which acute or chronic dysfunction in 1 organ may induce acute or chronic dysfunction in the other organ. It represents the confluence of heart-kidney interactions across several interfaces. These include the hemodynamic cross-talk between the failing heart and the response of the kidneys and vice versa, as well as alterations in neurohormonal markers and inflammatory molecular signatures characteristic of its clinical phenotypes. The mission of this scientific statement is to describe the epidemiology and pathogenesis of cardiorenal syndrome in the context of the continuously evolving nature of its clinicopathological description over the past decade. It also describes diagnostic and therapeutic strategies applicable to cardiorenal syndrome, summarizes cardiac-kidney interactions in special populations such as patients with diabetes mellitus and kidney transplant recipients, and emphasizes the role of palliative care in patients with cardiorenal syndrome. Finally, it outlines the need for a cardiorenal education track that will guide future cardiorenal trials and integrate the clinical and research needs of this important field in the future.
We believe that the pattern of blood pressure response to tilt during the time preceding the development of the vasovagal reaction may provide adjunctive diagnostic information. A group of 101 consecutive patients affected by syncope of uncertain origin underwent passive tilt testing for 45 min at 60 degrees followed, if negative, by oral (sublingual) trinitroglycerin (TNG) 0.4 microg with continuation of the test for 20 min. Three main patterns were observed: the classic (vasovagal) syncope pattern was observed in 36 patients who, during the preparatory phase, had a rapid and full compensatory reflex adaptation to upright position, resulting in stabilization of their blood pressure values until abrupt onset of the vasovagal reaction; the dysautonomic (vasovagal) syncope pattern was observed in 47 patients in whom steady-state adaptation to upright position was not possible. There was thus a progressive fall in their blood pressure until the occurrence of a typical vasovagal reaction; the orthostatic intolerance pattern was observed in 18 patients in whom there was a progressive fall in blood pressure, similar to that of the dysautonomic group, but this was not followed by a clear vasovagal reaction. Compared with the classic, the dysautonomic patients were older, had a higher prevalence of co-morbidities, a very much shorter history of syncopal episodes, and a prevalence of mixed and vasodepressor forms of the VASIS classification. The patients with orthostatic intolerance had clinical characteristics similar to the dysautonmic group but they could not be classified according to the VASIS classification. In conclusion, in patients with syncope, a variety of abnormal responses is observed during tilt testing, suggesting that different syndromes can be diagnosed by the test. A more detailed, although still arbitrary, classification may form the basis of a number of future drug and pacemaker trials, as well as help towards a greater understanding of the different mechanisms of tilt-induced syncope.
Pulmonary HTN detected on non-invasive imaging prior to renal transplantation appears to be an independent predictor of early graft dysfunction among those patients who receive a deceased donor kidney.
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